
LessWrong (Curated & Popular) "The optimal age to freeze eggs is 19" by GeneSmith
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Feb 18, 2026 Jean Smith, essayist and reproductive data analyst, argues for much earlier egg freezing and backs it with statistics. She explains why eggs age faster than the uterus and how waiting until the mid-30s harms outcomes. She breaks down IVF statistics, embryo screening limits, why stem-cell eggs are not an immediate fix, and gives a practical how-to and risk overview for freezing eggs.
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Eggs Drive Fertility Decline
- The female reproductive system ages fast and eggs, not the uterus, drive fertility decline.
- Freezing eggs can extend fertility by over a decade and enable births into the 50s.
Record-Setting Late Birth Example
- Jean Smith cites a reported case of a 74-year-old mother using donor eggs to show fertility extension limits.
- She uses this to illustrate that eggs determine reproductive window more than uterus age.
Industry Metrics Mask Early Decline
- The fertility industry groups all women under 35 together, masking early age-related decline.
- Measuring expected births per retrieval shows a 60% decline between ages 25 and 37.
